The entire scene felt so surrealistic she couldn't seem to move.
On the one hand, the whole scene feels a little too clear and cold-almost like it's a setup.
He couldn't put a finger on it, but the scene felt unreal.
But it is typical of the film's misjudgments that this scene feels cut short.
Some exceptionally good scenes, but I don't feel the whole adds up to the sum of the parts.
The scene still felt tense, but at least no one was making any threatening moves just yet.
As with just about everything else we see, the scene feels casually random and irrelevant, but turns out to be neither.
But somehow, because of it, the scene does not feel in the least bit static.
The entire scene felt surreal, like it had to be happening to any woman but her.
Mr. Davis also said that ads could actually make a scene in a game feel more real.